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American Burn Association Consensus Statements

Authors :
David G. Greenhalgh
Nicole S. Gibran
Sigrid A Blome-Eberwein Md
Mary Beth Lawless
Richard A.F. Clark
Judith Cullinane
Katie Moran
Jill L. Sproul
Patricia Kardos
Tamara Graves
Brad Wiggins
Lior Rosenberg
Kathleen A. Hollowed
Hamed Amani
Daniel L. Traber
Palmer Q. Bessey
Linda S. Edelman
Marion H. Jordan
Howard G. Smith
Warren L. Garner
Cleon W. Goodwin
Ryan M Fey
Bernadette Nedelec
Steven T. Boyce
Jimmy Holmes
David H. Ahrenholz
Carolyn B Blayney
Phil Fidler
Jeffrey C. Schneider
Alan Young
Michael J. Mosier
Karen J Richey
Giavonni M. Lewis
Michael Peck
Linwood R. Haith
Megan Nordlund
Jeannie Leggett
John Kirby
Philip Chang
Lillian D. Traber
Kelly Keller
Shari Honari
Rachel Novakovic
Peggie Simpson
Karen J. Kowalske
Sandra Yovino
Richard J. Kagan
George C. Kramer
Jacqueline Laird
Alisa Savetamal
Walter J. Meyer
Joan M. Weber
Carly Hunt
Shelley A. Wiechman
Matthias B. Donelan
Leopoldo C. Cancio
Victor Joe
Lucy Wibbenmeyer
William L. Hickerson
James C. Jeng
Vimal K. Murray
Mary Jo Baryza
Ingrid Parry
Nicholas A. Meyer
Jennifer Carter
Steven E. Wolf
Linda Gibbons
James A. Fauerbach
Dhaval Bhavsar
Maria Serio-Melvin
Cynthia L. Reigart
Elizabeth Kirk
Gretta E. Wilkinson
Adam J. Singer
Linda Ware
Gretchen J. Carrougher
Bruce Potenza
Derek Murray
Radha K. Holavanahalli
Richard L. Gamelli
Debra A. Reilly
Sidonie Moses
Maggie L. Dylewski
Anna Rinewalt
John Schultz
John Noordenbas
Sidney F. Miller
Larry M. Jones
Source :
Scopus-Elsevier
Publication Year :
2013
Publisher :
Oxford University Press (OUP), 2013.

Abstract

Development of metrics for burn care, including healing of skin wounds during the acute phase of treatment, is essential in an environment of decreasing resources and increasing interest in quality and accuracy of medical information. Advantages of consensus metrics include: tracking of trends in care; consistency of care; and correlation of treatment with medical outcomes. For cutaneous burn wounds, these advantages are confounded by factors that contribute to the heterogeneity of burn wounds, including but not limited to: TBSA of injury, depth of injury (partial or full thickness), cause, patient-dependent factors such as age, sex, and comorbidities, anatomic site, and time between injury and treatment. Similar factors contribute to complex injuries from trauma, depth, debridement or excision of devitalized tissue, dressing or grafting of the prepared wound bed, and assessment to determine wound closure. In the absence of confounding factors or comorbidities, wound closure is one of the key criteria for discharge from acute care whether in hospital, or ambulatory care. Not surprisingly, these metrics for wound healing have been used repeatedly in the assessment of developing therapies for wound care. In response, review by the FDA of novel therapies has led to Guidance for Industry: chronic cutaneous ulcer and burn wounds developing products for treatment. and allow for risk adjustment of individuals in the population, who otherwise may be outliers to the statistical mean of the entire population.

Details

ISSN :
1559047X
Volume :
34
Database :
OpenAIRE
Journal :
Journal of Burn Care & Research
Accession number :
edsair.doi.dedup.....4af1fb7428122372460182aaffa066ba